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Clients involved in family law disputes in North Carolina need both personal and professional support through times that are highly emotional, but require calm and reasoned decision-making. The Law Offices of Frank B Jackson provides clients with legal representation in the following areas of the law:
- Adoption
- Alimony, Spousal Support, and Spousal Maintenance
- Child Custody, Parental Responsibility, and Parenting Time Decisions
- Child Support
- Divorce, Dissolution, Legal Separation, and Annulment
- Domestic Abuse and Domestic Violence
- Juvenile Law and Juvenile Delinquency
- Marital Property
- Mediation
Alimony, Spousal Support, and Spousal Maintenance Alimony or spousal support is support paid by a supporting spouse to a dependent spouse. The amount and duration of alimony or spousal support depends on a number of factors including:
- The length of the marriage
- The age of each spouse
- The health of each spouse
- Educational levels of each spouse
- The income of each spouse
- Standard of living the parties enjoyed during the marriage
We can help you determine whether alimony or spousal support is an issue in your situation and, if so, what amount and term would be fair to pay or to receive.
Child Custody, Parental Responsibility, and Parenting Time Decisions
- Allocation of Parental Responsibility
- Parenting Time and Decision-Making
Whatever the terminology, we handle all issues relating to the physical, emotional, and financial wellbeing of children in North Carolina. Depending on the circumstances of the case, each parent is typically entitled to significant periods of parenting time with their children and input into major decisions affecting their children, including education, religion, and non-emergency medical procedures
Child Support Child support is generally ordered by the court in situations in which a child lives with one but not both parents. All states, including North Carolina, have guidelines by which courts determine child support. Courts plug numbers into the child support formula and come up with an amount of support that should be paid for the child or children. The child support guidelines are not an exact method of calculating child support in every situation, and parties can argue that because of special circumstances, a court should order more or less support than the guideline amount. North Carolina bases child support on a formula that takes into account the parents combined incomes, overnights spent with a child, and a parent's individual expenditure for health insurance and other extraordinary expenses. Also taken into account is whether a primary residential parent is a parent of a child of the parties under the age of thirty months old.
Divorce, Dissolution, Legal Separation, and Annulment Divorce, is the legal process by which a marriage is terminated. We handle all issues relating to:
- Divorce or dissolution of marriage
- Legal separation
- Declaration of invalidity, which is commonly referred to as an annulment
Domestic Abuse and Domestic Violence There is no excuse for domestic violence or domestic abuse. Domestic violence may involve physical, sexual, psychological, or emotional abuse. Domestic violence includes the following:
- Assault
- Sexual assault
- Reckless endangerment
- Kidnapping
- No contract orders
- Orders of protection
- Permanent restraining orders
- Temporary restraining orders
- Unlawful imprisonment
- Stalking
Marital Property North Carolina is not a "community property" state but it is an "equitable division" state. That means that each spouse will be awarded what is fair under the circumstances. While that sounds easy enough, dividing a marital estate at the time of a divorce has become an increasingly complex process as the division of marital assets is no longer simply a matter of identifying and dividing real and personal property. Today's divorce client requires the knowledge and expertise necessary to examine and evaluate issues relating to business interests, retirement accounts, pension plans, stock options, as well as an understanding of tax ramifications. When dividing a marital estate a court may consider the following:
- Length of the marriage
- Assets and debts of the parties
- Financial needs and liabilities of the parties
- Premarital or prenuptial agreements
- Separation agreements
- Tax consequences
We can assist you in determining what a fair settlement would be and in achieving that result either by negotiation or litigation.
Mediation Most family law disputes, including those involving child custody, child support, and marital property can be resolved without going to court. As court dockets in North Carolina have become more congested, there has been a greater focus on Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) methods such as mediation. Mediation is a process in which a third-party neutral, whether one mediator or more, acts as a facilitator to assist in resolving a dispute between two or more parties. ADR and mediation provides a viable option for those who prefer to stay out of court and has many potential advantages for most North Carolina families including:
- Reduced cost
- Efficient resolution
- Less emotional stress
- Control over the results
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